ByJim Gomez, Associated PressDecember 6, 2014

Manila, Philippines — A Swiss hostage made a dramatic escape Saturday from Abu Sayyaf extremists when he hacked a rebel commander and then got shot as he dashed to freedom amid a military bombardment, ending more than two years of jungle captivity in the southern Philippines, officials said.

Lorenzo Vinciguerra, 49, made his daring escape while government forces were firing artillery rounds near the jungle forest where he was being held in mountainous Patikul town in Sulu province. He grabbed a long knife, hacked an Abu Sayyaf commander and then ran away, but was shot and wounded by another militant, security officials said.

Philippine army scout rangers later found him and escorted him to safety.

In Bern, the Swiss government expressed relief that Vinciguerra had regained his freedom, but regretted that his Dutch companion remained in captivity.

While lying later in a military combat hospital bed, his head wrapped in a bandage, Vinciguerra basked in his hard-won freedom and thanked the military. He said he was happy because he can finally spend Christmas with his family, but worried about his companion, Ewold Horn, who was still in Abu Sayyaf custody in Sulu's jungles.

"I talked to him and asked him to join me, but he refused," Vinciguerra said of Horn, adding that the Dutchman had teeth problems and other ailments.

Vinciguerra said he felt the extremists would treat Horn well and urged the militants to surrender and start a new life.

"My final message to everybody: Put the gun down and come out from the forest," he told a reporter. "It's a nice life out here."

Vinciguerra was seized by the militants in nearby Tawi Tawi province in February 2012 while on a bird-watching trip with Horn and Ivan Sarenas, a Filipino birdwatcher who served as their guide.

Sarenas, who escaped shortly after they were seized by jumping off a boat that was taking them to Sulu, said he was happy about Vinceguerra's escape, but saddened that he was wounded and that Horn was still being held.

"It is not the best news, but it still is good news after so long," he told The Associated Press. "I just want to hug Lorenzo for now."

Sarenas said that he was determined to escape, and that Vinciguerra and Horn had agreed to his plan. Sarenas, a triathlete, said he jumped off the boat and dove deep underwater for fear he would be shot. He wasn't and was rescued by fishermen.

The Abu Sayyaf was founded in the early 1990s on Basilan island, near Jolo. With an unwieldy collective of Islamic preachers and outlaws, it vowed to wage jihad, or holy war, in the predominantly Roman Catholic Philippines, but lost its key leaders early in combat, sending it on a violent path of extremism and criminality.

Washington has listed the Abu Sayyaf as a terrorist group and blames it for deadly attacks on American troops, foreign missionaries, and tourists and civilians in the south.

The Al Qaeda-inspired group still has an estimated 400 fighters split into about six factions. The mostly armed rural villagers still hold several hostages, including a Malaysian police officer and a Japanese treasure hunter.

Although weakened by battle setbacks, the militants have survived thanks largely to money collected from ransom kidnappings and extortion.

The Philippine military recently launched a new offensive against the militants after they staged a new bout of kidnappings, including the seizing of Chinese tourists in neighboring Malaysia's Sabah state, which is only hours away by speedboat from the southern Philippines.

Marines and army troops assaulted at least three Sulu jungle encampments of the Abu Sayyaf on Saturday, with artillery and gunfire, including in Patikul, killing an unspecified number of militants, according to the military.

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Associated Press writers Oliver Teves in Manila and Frank Jordans in Berlin contributed to this report.